At-Tuwani

About CPT At-Tuwani

CPT accompanies Palestinian shepherds, farmers and school children in the area around Israel's Ma’on settlement and its outposts. On several occasions, settlers from Ma’on have attacked Palestinian children going to and from school.

CPT Tuwani:

  • Monitors treatment of Palestinians at Israeli military checkpoints and roadblocks.
  • Intervenes during Israeli military invasions of Palestinian homes.
  • Continues regular visits, along with Israeli peace activists, to Palestinian families facing harassment from Israeli settlers
  • Provides daily accompaniment for Palestinian children walking to and from school
  • Accompanies Palestinian shepherds and farmers to fields where they are exposed to assault by extremist settlers
  • Joins Israeli peace groups to replant olive groves destroyed by settlers
  • Joins Palestinians and Israeli peace activists in acts of public nonviolent resistance to Israel's construction of a "security wall" which cuts through Palestinian territory.

 More information:  at-Tuwani on-line

Reflection

At-Tuwani: Clearing the Land

By Jan Benvie

The landscapes of the Southern Hebron Hills remind me of my own Scottish Highlands. They both share the same poignant, barren beauty. Here the ragged, rocky hillsides are more sparsely covered, but both landscapes are littered with the sad ruins of forsaken homes and villages.

The Scottish ruins date from a shameful period of history (over 200 years ago) known as the ‘Highland Clearances’. In the civil wars of 1715 and 1745 the Highlanders supported the defeated Jacobites (those who wanted James Stewart as King) and the victorious government wanted to get rid of these rebellious citizens. Some land was sold in shady deals, some was taken by the government and given to their supporters. Few Highlanders had legal papers proving land ownership, so it was easy for the victors to steal the land ‘legally’. The new ‘owners’ forcibly evicted between 150 and 250 thousand people. Many Highlanders, deprived of their homes and livelihoods, lived and died in broken-hearted poverty in far away towns and foreign lands.

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IRAQ: CPTers visit Sangasar, witness bombing near Iranian border

The mayor of Sangasar recited a litany of damages caused by Turkey and Iran’s "continuous bombing” over the last two months of thirty-eight villages connected to Sangasar: 140-150 families displaced, cattle killed, trees, crops and farmland destroyed, people injured, village water systems destroyed, and pain for so many lives.

A year ago in Sangasar (in the Suleimaniya area of the Kurdistan Regional Government), we met Susan, then a twenty-seven-year old single woman who had lost a leg when her village was bombed. We were glad when the mayor said that she now had an artificial leg. She had made a lot of progress in the past year, but remained depressed, feeling little hope for her future.

CPTnet Stories

Events

Titlesort iconStart Time:End Time:
Palestine / Israel DelegationJanuary 6, 2009January 19, 2009
Palestine / Israel DelegationMarch 17, 2009March 30, 2009
Palestine / Israel DelegationMay 19, 2009June 1, 2009
Palestine / Israel DelegationJuly 21, 2009August 3, 2009
Palestine / Israel DelegationOctober 6, 2009October 19, 2009
Palestine / Israel DelegationNovember 17, 2009November 30, 2009